Joschka Fischer.

AuthorPal, Amitabh
PositionTHE PROGRESSIVE INTERVIEW - Interview

Joschka Fischer is a defining figure in recent German history. His long and strange political journey culminated in his becoming Germany's vice chancellor and foreign minister from 1998 to 2005 as the leader of the German Greens. During much of his stint in office, he was the most popular politician in the country.

Fischer first gained public prominence in the late 1960s and the early 1970s as part of the German radical student movement. (Ironically, Fischer never formally completed high school, and is an autodidact.) His battles with the German police earned him notoriety, and he spent seven weeks in jail during this period. Over the years, he earned a living from such disparate jobs as an autoworker, a taxi driver (which gave him "a deep insight into the human character," he told an editor at The Wall Street Journal ), and a clerk at the Karl Marx Bookshop in Frankfurt.

In the early 1980s, Fischer got busy organizing the German Greens. In 1983, he was elected to the German parliament and in 1985 became the minister of environment for the state of Hesse. He appeared for the swearing-in ceremony in casual clothes and sneakers. He continued his ascent by becoming in the mid-1990s the co-chair of the Green parliamentarians. In 1998, when Gerhard Schroeder won the chancellorship, the Greens, with 7 percent of the vote, became the junior partner in the ruling coalition, and Fischer became the vice chancellor and foreign minister.

In office, Fischer disappointed some of his fellow party members by his interventionist stance in the Balkans, where he successfully advocated for German participation in the NATO action in Kosovo.

But Fischer won praise domestically and internationally for his opposition to the Iraq War. "You have to make the case," he told Donald Rumsfeld in February 2003 at a Munich meeting. "Excuse me, I'm not convinced. This is my problem. And I cannot go to the public and say, 'Oh, well, let's go to war because there are reasons,' and so on, and I don't believe in them."

Dragged down by the weight of Schroeder's unpopularity, the Social Democrat-Green coalition narrowly lost in the fall of 2005. In an emotional meeting with the Green caucus in parliament, Fischer announced that he was stepping down as party leader. Two months later, he resigned as foreign minister.

Fischer's personal life has been as eventful as his public one. He got married for the fifth time in October 2005. In 2000, Fischer decided to go on a diet, and completely forswore alcohol, a huge step for a self-proclaimed gastronome and oenophile. He lost a considerable amount of weight and even ran the New York marathon in 2001. He wrote a best-selling self-help book, My Long Race Towards Myself , chronicling his self-improvement saga...

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